YOSHITOMO NARA (B. 1959)
YOSHITOMO NARA (B. 1959)
YOSHITOMO NARA (B. 1959)
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PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF HIROMICHI NAKANO
YOSHITOMO NARA (B. 1959)

Red in Blue

Details
YOSHITOMO NARA (B. 1959)
Red in Blue
titled 'Red in blue' (on the overlap)
acrylic on cotton mounted on canvas
30 x 25 cm. (11 3/4 x 9 7/8 in.)
Painted in 1999
Provenance
Gallery Hakutosha, Nagoya
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 1999
Literature
Yoshitomo Nara: The Complete Works 1984 - 2010, Volume I: Paintings, Sculptures, Editions, Photographs, Bijutsu Shuppan Sha, Tokyo, 2011 (illustrated, plate P-1999-026, p. 158).
Exhibited
Nagoya, Gallery Hakutosha, Happy Hour, 1999.

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Lot Essay

“I have been collecting for fifty-five years. I began with toys, and then vintage Barbie doll, Mickey Mouse in 1930’s and even antiquities. Fifty years ago, I bought an Andy Warhol work when I walked pass Gallery Watari, and it was for two times my annual salary then and I thought it will work somehow! After that I got to know Christie’s, and the auction company opened the door for me to the art world. I was able to handle works that I had only seen in museums, with a price attached. The auction catalogues were like art books, and I learned about 20th century modern art from Christie’s. There is a spending limit for me, hence I could only buy one to two works every year. My price range cannot afford the works that were illustrated in art books, therefore I went for works of my own taste. I have decorated my home with the works I bought for over ten years (and visitors would comment on the works ten years later thinking that they saw them in my house before and it was amazing.) Even if the works may have no value in the future, at least I have used them to decorate my home and it is worth the cost. My collection includes Keith Haring, Banksy, Henry Darger to Liu Wei. No matter how much I like the works I could still trade them in for new works, as it is necessary to buy new works. New artist acquisitions is like a dream come true to me, and being able to continue my collecting journey. It is a special feeling to include contemporary art in my collection, it took me by surprise but also necessary to myself.

In the late 1990s, which was a different period to the 1980s boom, the jellybean-shaped eyes of the rebellious kids hit my heart. I saw that there was a show in Hakutosha Gallery in Nagoya so I went in the morning on the very first day. There were around twenty works in the show and of course the well-known Nara jellybean-shaped eyes and mischievous face was what I was looking for, but the exhibition was almost sold out already on the first day morning! (Red in Blue) was the only work that was still available and that’s how we met it. Although it wasn’t the most desirable work to me in the show, I still asked for it because I knew it was very difficult to get the best works from the gallery, and I really liked Nara so I wanted to get any work so that I could run into more paintings by Nara in the future! So I have been looking for his works and later I bought The Pond Girl, which is a very rare oil painting.”

- Mr. Hiromichi Nakano, May 8th, 2024

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